Michigan does not have casinos. Most people go to Windsor for casinos. Btw, Ohio does not need them. All of the money that these casinos make come from local people. No durable good has ever come from having a casino in ones local town. And please don't cite tax revenue that will go for schools...when the Ohio lottery came into being, they promised it would end school funding issues...you can plainly see where we are with this one.

Help me out -- what is that Motor City Casino I passed when in Detroit, and that other one, MGM or something? Isn't there a Michigan Gaming Board or Commission or somesuch? Or do you mean just not true table games? I'm confused but I agree completely with the principle that these casinos are not good and do not provide that which their promoters tout. I've heard some recent arguments on some satellite NPR channel, and the pro-casino people were arguing very evasively and poorly. ~ H

You could not be more wrong, unless you are going to make the argument that the little pieces of tribal land, totally encapsulated within the state of Michigan, do not count as being "Michigan." How about the MGM Grand Casino or the Greek Town Casino? Those are the new ones built to counter the Windsor casinos. All the various smaller ones in more rural parts of Michigan are too many to list. Here's a site though: http://michigan.casinocity.com/

Casinos monopolize the exploitation of idiots. They should be illegal under anti-trust laws.

I have always thought the same thing about churches, but whaddyagonnado? Btw to the OP... I'm back in Cincinnati now, but I don't know if I want to meet all you fellows. I'm afraid you'll try to undress me with your eyes. (haha j/k)

You could not be more wrong, unless you are going to make the argument that the little pieces of tribal land, totally encapsulated within the state of Michigan, do not count as being "Michigan." How about the MGM Grand Casino or the Greek Town Casino? Those are the new ones built to counter the Windsor casinos. All the various smaller ones in more rural parts of Michigan are too many to list. Here's a site though: http://michigan.casinocity.com/

I don't believe so. Don't know about the physical land, but they are all Native American operations, right? Regardless of the land that they are on, and who runs them, as the Michigan Gaming Board or whatever they call it, an agency of the State of Michigan, have been granted the authority to regulate the casinos as part of the deal under which the casinos exist in the first place, it seems to me that most would reasonably consider them to be a de facto part of Michigan. The Native American tribes are technically sovereign, but that really is a lip service sort of thing. ~ H